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Minorities underrepresented |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Posted: Dec 14 2014 at 11:02am |
Posted: 7:00 a.m. Sunday,
Dec. 14, 2014 PUBLIC SAFETY Minorities underrepresented in local police
agencies
Staff Writer Namron Bush’s young, black face stood out
among the crowd of white students who were repeating a police officer’s oath on
stage. Bush, along with 20 others, was about to
graduate from a peace officer training academy at Sinclair Community College in
Dayton on Tuesday and go on to seek jobs in law enforcement across southwest
Ohio. Police agencies across the region rarely
hire minorities like Bush. The area’s biggest police departments employ dozens
of officers but often only a handful are black, Hispanic or Asian-American, and
none mirror the diversity of the community they patrol, the Journal-News found. After 18 weeks of training, Bush hopes to
change those numbers. “The more I’ve seen (in the national news),
the more I kind of want to make the impact toward getting a positive image of
police officers, hopefully, encouraging other black men to even become police
officers,” Bush said. In an era of growing mistrust between
police and black residents because of high-profile incidents involving police
who have shot or strangled black men and children, that disparity is coming
under closer scrutiny. Officers
across the region say that they want a diverse workforce that looks like the
community but have trouble finding interested and qualified minority applicants
who want to join the force.
“I don’t think there’s any doubt that there continues to be a challenge
for law enforcement to recruit minority members,” Ohio Attorney General Mike
DeWine told this newspaper. “It clearly needs to be dealt with.” But others argue police agencies are just
not doing enough to recruit minorities. “It’s a solvable problem,” said Patrick
Oliver, director of the criminal justice program at “Agencies need to do something different,”
Oliver said. “If you do what you’ve always done before, you’re going to get
what you’ve always gotten before.” The city of Earlier this week, the city announced a new
commission that will study how Police officials are also pushing the city
to agree to give the agency’s police chief more power to pick from a wider pool
of applicants. Currently, he can only
make selections based on who scores in the top percentile on entry exams. “When the community looks to police
officers and they see a reflection of themselves within the police force, I
think that goes a long way to building and maintaining trust,” Bucheit said. Bucheit said the department has trouble
finding minorities who want to become officers. And, in the testing process
other qualifications, such as if the officer speaks Spanish or has a bachelor’s
degree are more important than race. “The biggest challenge to hiring (diverse
officers) is making sure we have qualified people in the process from the
beginning,” Bucheit said. “The chief can’t hire someone who doesn’t show up and
take the test. We can recruit all we want, but if someone doesn’t show up and
take the test and put their name in, we can never hire them.” Council member Archie Johnson argues the
city’s lack of workplace diversity is a systemic failure and officials haven’t
tried hard enough to find minorities to fill openings. He wants to see the
police department seek out minority residents from across “A lot of people say, ‘they don’t apply,’”
Johnson said of minorities. “(City officials) are not willing to cross the line
to make the difference. It’s easier to blame the applicants than it is to make
the effort. We make excuses.” Johnson, who has been outspoken about how
minorities are treated in In addition to the Ferguson shooting,
protests were sparked locally in August when a police officer shot and killed
John Crawford III, a Fairfield man, while he strolled through a Walmart in
Beavercreek with an air rifle in hand. Police mistook the item for a real gun. Televisions across the country have
recently shown videos of a 12-year-old boy at a All of the victims were black and the
officers were white. The series
of events has led some to question relations between cops and the communities
they police as well as the small number of black men and women serving those
agencies. More than half of the blacks surveyed in a
Pew Research poll out this week said they anticipate race relations between
police and the community will worsen within the next year; 34 percent of whites
said the same. Even forces praised for their diversity,
such as the Cincinnati Police Department where 30 percent of the officers are
black, still don’t represent what the community looks like. More than 44
percent of the people living in Deep-seated racial homogeneity is more
prevalent in police forces across some of southwest Out of the 87 police officers working for Other areas, such as Police in But they also don’t know how to fix the
problem or why minorities don’t often apply for the positions, Deputy Chief
Rodney Muterspaw said. “That’s a good question, we’ve asked that
question of ourselves,” Muterspaw said. “I don’t really know.” Because of budget constraints, he said the
department is limited to recruiting candidates that have already gone through a
police training academy on their own dime. They often look for recruits at
Sinclair or Racial
diversity is slim there, too. Since 2012, Butler Tech has graduated 178
students from its 17-week police training academy and 92 percent of those
cadets were white. He doesn’t have an answer but Muterspaw
wonders, though, if some black or Hispanic kids are turned off at an early age
from becoming a cop because they see so few that look like them. “If you’re a young person growing up in an
area of town and you see the officer coming to your house is totally different
from you, you might think, ‘I’m not able to do that job,’” Muterspaw said. That’s an image Bush, the Sinclair graduate
who is now on the hunt for a job as a police officer, hopes to change. “I was laying on the couch, I was like,
‘Man, I’m just tired of seeing all of this negative imagery of being a police
officer.’ And I thought of how I could make an impact,” he said. “So, simply
becoming an officer and creating that positive imagery towards police officers
helped me make that decision.” |
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Here we are having these
same discussions again and again. We have had several
discussion of this kind over the past 20 years concerning the need for diversity
of teachers in the classrooms of our schools. Have they solved this problem
yet? I don't think so.. |
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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Why does the police force, fire department or any other outfit HAVE to reflect the population breakout of any community? Who made that rule and what was used to substantiate this mandate? Why do we accept this criteria and who made it a rule for staffing in any organization? How about the BEST QUALIFIED NO MATTER WHAT RACE THEY MAY BE? Doesn't get any more fair than that.
If the minorities are not interested in applying for the job, then it goes to those who take the initiative to go through the evaluations. No one is stopping them from applying. I'm with Vivian when she says the jobs should go to the most qualified, not to fill a quota number for minorities. Watch COPS on any given night. You may see episodes where the police minorities are actually the majority in the half hour show. Blacks and Latinos both dominate the calls on some episodes. Other times, the shows are majority driven So what? How about the Cosby Show or the Jefferson's back in the day? Mostly minorities, right? I didn't hear any complaining from the majority population about an unequal number of show participants. Other shows have followed suit as to casting. If the minorities can't score high enough on the evaluations, then so be it. Would it be a fair evaluation process if they awarded the job to a low scoring minority over a higher scoring person who is not a minority? Of course not. If that's the case, then it offers absolutely no credibility to the rules of the game in candidate selection. Why, in today's world, are we going out of our way to ignore the majority segment of our society and we cater to the minority 10 to 20 percent of any given city? Look at what we are viewing on the evening news each night of late. Total attention to people who are using the "squeeky wheel gets the grease" routine with Al Sharpton/Jesse Jackson inciting the minority into protest action. Don't see Sharpton or Jackson as dedicated to action when a "majority" officer gets shot by a minority, do you? Why not? I thought they stood for equal justice for everyone and both are titled "Reverend" as if to have a religious presence about them. Kinda looks like a one way street as to their behavior, doesn't it? Staying on the subject of minorities, have seen stories about the prison population that discusses the overabundance of minorities in prison. Is the issue really targeting minorities and sending them off to prison or is it just a fact that the lack of structure, poor parenting role models, poverty, lifestyle and the crowds these people CHOSE to hang out with actually put them there. They had a choice and chose poorly didn't they? Should we really feel empathy for them as they want you to do? C'mon. No, IMO, this whole "cater to me because I should be special" thing is getting way out of hand. Stand on your own and go out and get it yourself on your credentials like the majority of us have to do. Live within societies rules and stop leaning on your minority status, using it as leverage to take advantage of any given situation. JMO |
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I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Vivian Moon
MUSA Council Joined: May 16 2008 Location: Middletown, Ohi Status: Offline Points: 4187 |
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Well said Vet |
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Bocephus
MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 04 2009 Status: Offline Points: 838 |
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Liberal paper trying to fan the flames? Last I heard area Police depts. Have been trying to recruit minorities for years and their just far and few between and usually get to choose who pays the most.
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